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ForumsDiscussion Forum → Happy Pi Day
Happy Pi Day
2009-03-14, 11:39 AM #1
mmm
Attachment: 21529/pi-pie.jpg (33,653 bytes)
2009-03-14, 11:41 AM #2
PENIS PIE

happy birthday russell!
2009-03-14, 12:10 PM #3
3.14159264 is as far as i know it.
<3 Pi.
2009-03-14, 12:19 PM #4
Your dates are wrong.
nope.
2009-03-14, 12:20 PM #5
in your world pi day doesn't exist

what a sad sad world
2009-03-14, 12:50 PM #6
...What?
2009-03-14, 1:09 PM #7
baconfish is right pi day should be 31st of april instead :v:
2009-03-14, 1:09 PM #8
edit]
"Nulla tenaci invia est via"
2009-03-14, 1:10 PM #9
I don't know why Brits complain. We get pi day, they get e day. It's fair.
2009-03-14, 1:20 PM #10
It was more that it shouldn't exist. :P
nope.
2009-03-14, 1:27 PM #11
No, it should exist because it's culturally relevant.

Americans can use pi day to teach their children the geometry of round objects.

Brits can use e day to teach their children about the natural logarithm (i.e. something that starts out strong but then change becomes increasingly more gradual until it's an irrelevant and uninteresting police state).

:P
2009-03-14, 1:32 PM #12
Originally posted by Jon`C:
No, it should exist because it's culturally relevant.

Americans can use pi day to teach their children the geometry of round objects.

Brits can use e day to teach their children about the natural logarithm (i.e. something that starts out strong but then change becomes increasingly more gradual until it's an irrelevant and uninteresting police state).

:P

That got a chuckle out of me, thanks.
2009-03-14, 1:33 PM #13
The thing is Americans won't because the only people that notice it are the swarms of nerds on the internet, and they don't reproduce. :P
nope.
2009-03-14, 1:35 PM #14
It's official now. So it should be on desk calendars.
2009-03-14, 1:45 PM #15
Originally posted by Jon`C:
No, it should exist because it's culturally relevant.

Americans can use pi day to teach their children the geometry of round objects.

Brits can use e day to teach their children about the natural logarithm (i.e. something that starts out strong but then change becomes increasingly more gradual until it's an irrelevant and uninteresting police state).

:P


haha
2009-03-16, 12:09 AM #16
Did anyone notice the backwards number on the pi? 3.141 ->5<- 92653...
Sam: "Sir we can't call it 'The Enterprise'"
Jack: "Why not!"

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